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Refugee
10-18-2007, 04:45 PM
School officials in Portland, Maine, voted to make birth control pills available to students at one of the city's middle schools.

The contraceptives would be available to girls in the seventh and eighth grades, with their parents' permission.

The move, sanctioned late Wednesday in a 7-2 vote by the Portland School Committee, follows a spate of pregnancies among middle school girls.

King Middle School will be Maine's first school to have a full range of contraception available, including birth control pills and patches.

Condoms have been available at King's health center since 2000.

A school health center will make birth control pills available to girls as young as 11. Prescriptions will be given after a student undergoes a physical exam by a physician or nurse practitioner, according to Lisa Belanger, who oversees Portland's student health centers.

Parents must consent to their children using the school's health center, as most middle school students are ages 11 to 13.

Nevertheless, treatment is confidential under state law. That means students can decide whether to inform their parents about the services they receive.

"It's very rare that middle schools do this," said Divya Mohan, a spokeswoman for the National Assembly on School-Based Health Care.
There were no figures on just how many middle schools nationwide provide birth control to students in grades six through eight.

In Portland, health officials offered the plan based on reports of 17 pregnancies at its three middle schools in the last four years. That excludes miscarriages and abortions that weren't reported to the school nurse.

Five of the 134 students who visited King's health center during the 2006-07 school year admit to having had sex, according to Amanda Rowe, lead nurse in the city's school health centers.

Portland School Committee member Sarah Thompson, also the mother of a King eighth-grader, supported the policy, even though it made her "uncomfortable."

"I know I've done my job as a parent," Thompson said. "[But there] may be a time when she doesn't feel comfortable coming to me ... [and] not all these kids have a strong parental advocate at home."

John Coyne, the committee's chairman, voted against the change. He said the roles of social agencies and public schools have blurred over the years. "At some point there needs to be a clearing of the gray lines," he said.

The other "no" vote came from Ben Meiklejohn who said a parental consent form, which allows students to receive treatment at the school health center, does not clearly define the services being offered.

Other opponents cited religious and health objections.

"We are dealing with children," said Diane Miller, a former school nurse. "I am just horrified at the suggestion."

Whether prescriptions for birth control would be offered this school year or next wasn't immediately clear.

But supporters said the kids already having sex need better access to birth control.

"This isn't encouraging kids to have sex. This is about the kids who are engaging in sexual activity," said Richard Veilleux, executive director of the Maine Assembly on School-Based Health Care.

Echosoftom
10-18-2007, 06:02 PM
In Portland, health officials offered the plan based on reports of 17 pregnancies at its three middle schools in the last four years. That excludes miscarriages and abortions that weren't reported to the school nurse.
I just saw this story on the news. Of course these parents are all up in arms over this decision. But when you look at the statistics, something is wrong. When are parents going to face the fact that their children may be out there having sex and they need to be protected? Not just pregnancy but all the STD's, HIV and Hepatitis as well. I personally wouldn't mind it if the school had my back. Whatever works is what I say.

wildgator
10-18-2007, 07:39 PM
Give 'em birth control pills! You can't control what they do. And give them condoms too!

agirl
10-18-2007, 08:36 PM
^ Exactly. One would hope your children are practicing abstinence, but anyone that believes all 12 year olds are innocent, are fooling themselves. We had young moms way too often. They get younger all the time. Children raising children and the taxpayers are the ones footing the bill.

Pettyjunkie
10-19-2007, 03:10 PM
I find this so weird. It's giving the kids the idea that it's okay when it's not, but then again I don't even like seeing kids in high school pregnant.

Refugee
10-19-2007, 03:45 PM
I just have a hard time thinking it's okay to give a child hormones. I don't mind condoms, that is a great idea, but pills? Not so sure.

Aimee Wilbury
10-19-2007, 04:17 PM
I'm 15 and I've never even kissed a boy. Or a girl. I haven't even gone to a school dance!

Magnolia
10-19-2007, 07:30 PM
Absolutely not. This is not the school's job. If my child had gone to a school
that did that, I would have taken them out.

Relic
10-19-2007, 07:45 PM
Considering the parents have to approve before their kids get the pills I don't see the problem.

Its not like the school is handing the pills out like party favors, and no matter what eventually happens, this ought to WAKE UP some parents (and some kids) and will hopefully lead to some dialog between them about sex. Its shocking how little some families talk about the 'dreaded' S-word.

EpiphanyDH
10-19-2007, 09:42 PM
Giving birth control pills to teenagers is definately a bad idea. Condoms? An excellent idea.

Wingspan91089
10-19-2007, 10:03 PM
I find this so weird. It's giving the kids the idea that it's okay when it's not, but then again I don't even like seeing kids in high school pregnant.

I don't either.... I found out on Wednesday that my school has a child care center for the kids of students.... sad, really.

Pettyjunkie
10-20-2007, 01:36 AM
^We have a different high school for that. It just seems so creepy to give middle schoolers birth control. I can't seem to get my head around that. Parents really need to step up and be parents! How can they let their kids go around having sex like that? This is just ridiculous. Well looks like I found my topic for the staff ed in my newspaper!